Category Archives: Sports

World Cup 2010: What we’ve learned today | Paul Hayward

South Africa have all but been eliminated, leaving Africa desperately hoping at least one of its five other teams avoid a wipe-out This World Cup needs a strong African contender to extend the sense of triumph beyond the continent’s bare staging of the tournament for the first time. To think the six nations who call Africa home would be satisfied with an early wipe-out on the field of play so long as the event itself can be called a success would be to misunderstand the ambitions of football in these parts. South Africa are already in dire peril of becoming the first host country to fail to progress beyond the group stage. At Loftus Versfeld in Pretoria last night, Bafana Bafana fell victim to a striker who is developing a formidable reputation for crushing dreams. Diego Forlán, scorer of two of Uruguay’s goals in the 3-0 win, was Fulham’s tormentor in the Europa League final in Hamburg. • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more This far weightier blow against romance left South Africans crushed and embarrassed. As they left bars and restaurants they were already haunted by a vision of how this World Cup might feel if they no longer have Carlos Alberto Perreira’s side to cheer. We are in uncharted territory here. Never has a World Cup host had to abandon its prime allegiance and find another so quickly. South Africa must beat France in Bloemfontein to have any hope of advancing. The mantra has been that all Africans would support whichever team was left when theirs went out, but the portents are not good. Nigeria have already lost to Argentina and Greece, Algeria went down to Slovenia, Cameroon were beaten by Japan and the Ivory Coast began with a 0-0 draw with Portugal. Ghana’s 1-0 victory over Serbia remains the continent’s only flourish. There is still time for this unpromising early momentum to be reversed, but it pains all sentient neutrals to imagine South Africa’s energy and their sacrifices off the pitch coming to nought. Most obviously, Africa cannot be a nursery for the rich European clubs without the countries that supply that talent progressing at national level. This World Cup was meant to strengthen the African game. Otherwise it’s just a circus passing through. World Cup 2010 South Africa Paul Hayward guardian.co.uk

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World Cup 2010: What we’ve learned today | Paul Hayward

Kevin Pietersen confirms Hampshire exit

• Kevin Pietersen to leave Hampshire at season’s end • Middlesex and Surrey linked with England batsman Ever since Kevin Pietersen observed during his only appearance of the season for Hampshire last Sunday that “geographically it just doesn’t work – I live in Chelsea”, his official confirmation today that he would leave Hampshire at the end of the season was only a matter of time. Pietersen’s determination to play in London automatically limits his choice to Surrey and Middlesex. Surrey have the flash and the cash but Middlesex have been rumoured since March to be interested in Pietersen. Angus Fraser, Middlesex’s managing director of cricket, was playing coy last night. “You’d be a fool not to think about it,” he said. If both negotiations failed, then Pietersen would be in a pickle. There is talk of him going freelance and abandoning county cricket altogether but it would be a foolish move and one that he is not thought to be considering seriously. Although there is nothing in the regulations that insists Pietersen has a county contract, England’s coach, Andy Flower, would expect him to maintain that link. It is still regarded as vital that England players have a county to play for when England deem that they need the practice; no matter that Pietersen has not played a championship match at the Rose Bowl since he made his Test debut in 2005 or that his Friends Provident t20 match on Sunday at the Rose Bowl was his first for Hampshire in two years. Rod Bransgrove, Hampshire’s chairman, has gradually become hardened to an inevitable parting of the ways. “Given the international schedule we have to adhere to and the England management’s policy of withdrawing players from county cricket in favour of rest and recuperation, we haven’t seen as much of KP as we would have liked over the past six years,” he said. “The ECB’s policy of releasing players for their counties is quite opaque and I don’t understand it.” Bransgrove is also peeved that England have withdrawn Pieterson from a Hampshire Q&A on the eve of the NatWest Series ODI against Australia next Tuesday. “It was 45 minutes and one of the few occasions he was staying locally,” he said. Pietersen’s move is important not for where he might go — if he does join Middlesex, under current arrangements he will barely play for them – as much as what it says about the state of English cricket. Bransgrove’s frustration with Pietersen’s unavailability for t20 cricket is one that all counties would share about their leading internationals. The ECB has relaunched t20 but has been unable to include its top players in it. The public, which spots these things, has responded with suspicion. That will become a central point at issue when the counties again debate the future structure of the game. “The ECB have also shown no commitment to the competition,” Bransgrove said. “Our international player was only available for one game. We really need to grasp the opportunity of t20, but it’s almost gone now.” Of more immediate concern for Hampshire is that Kabir Ali, who has the best strike rate in the county game, will miss the rest of the season with a serious knee injury. Kevin Pietersen Hampshire Cricket David Hopps guardian.co.uk

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Kevin Pietersen confirms Hampshire exit

World Cup 2010: Robert Green’s redemption remains stuck in limbo | Paul Hayward

The England goalkeeper will not know if he can make a return journey from bum to hero until two hours before kick-off Reflecting on Tim Howard’s downfall as Manchester United’s first-choice goalkeeper in the summer of 2005, Esther Howard, his mother, said in a recent interview in the New Yorker: “In England the goalkeeper is treated like a necessary evil. It’s a totally thankless position. One mistake and you’ve gone from being a hero to being a bum.” Not quite, because Fabio Capello is staying true to Robert Green, author of the goalkeeping howler against the USA last Saturday. The England coach will not say whether Green will retain the jersey against Algeria but nor will he join the chorus that says the West Ham man’s mistake was terminal, which is a loyalty of sorts. The two-hour team-disclosure rule stands, so Capello is sticking to one of his golden principles. • Follow the Guardian’s World Cup team on Twitter • Sign up to play our great Fantasy Football game • Stats centre: Get the lowdown on every player • The latest team-by-team news, features and more The selectorial logic that sent Howard to Everton was not quite as brutal as his mother claims because United had coveted Edwin van der Sar since the end of the Peter Schmeichel era but Mrs Howard’s reading of the goalkeeper’s fear of rejection would have resonated with Green on the eve of England’s second Group

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World Cup 2010: Robert Green’s redemption remains stuck in limbo | Paul Hayward

Have you pressed mute because of the World Cup’s vuvuzelas?

Have you been forced to kill the volume while watching World Cup matches?

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Have you pressed mute because of the World Cup’s vuvuzelas?

Dermot Weld finally wins Ascot’s Gold Cup with Rite Of Passage

• Irish trainer had gone close with Vinnie Roe and Vintage Crop • Winner may run in Melbourne Cup before return to hurdles But for the sunshine, it could have been a scene from Cheltenham in the closing stages of the Gold Cup here today. Courage and stamina were all that mattered in the last of the 20 furlongs and it was Rite Of Passage, placed in a hurdle race at the jump racing Festival back in March, who had the grit to beat Age Of Aquarius by a neck. So much of the summer programme is focused on speed, casting horses as dragsters to burn their way to success but, on this day at Ascot, they are more like monster trucks. Quick they are not. The spectacle comes from the sheer power they expend to reach top speed and then stay there, from one punishing furlong to the next, and this Gold Cup was a copybook example. Age Of Aquarius had been a jumpy, sweaty mess in the paddock and drifted out to 8-1, having been second-favourite in the morning, as Manifest and Ask vied for the right to start favourite. Ask won that battle, going off at 11-4, but both he and Manifest – who moved towards the lead like a good horse four furlongs out but ran out of stamina soon afterwards – were beaten two furlongs out as Age Of Aquarius struck for home. For a moment, it seemed that Johnny Murtagh, successful in the last two Gold Cups on Yeats, had made a decisive move. Like a tanker finally reaching fourth gear, though, Rite Of Passage started to eat into his lead under Pat Smullen and for the next quarter of a mile there was no more than a neck between them. Age Of Aquarius did not weaken but Rite Of Passage, a 20-1 chance, had enough strength in his gallop to carry him into a narrow lead just past the furlong pole. Murtagh asked every question of his partner – picking up a three-day suspension as a result – but he could not claw back the deficit. Purple Moon was six lengths further away in third, while Ask was only fifth and Manifest finished tailed off. “It’s a special day and a race I’ve always wanted to win,” Dermot Weld, Rite Of Passage’s trainer, said. “I love training stayers. I’ve been blessed with many good sprinters, but training horses over a number of years is my joy, keeping them sound and keeping them right. “I was beaten a neck with Vinnie Roe and less than a length with Vintage Crop [in previous Gold Cups]. There were no excuses, we just got beaten by better horses on the day, and Lester Piggott said to me many years ago that there’s a big difference between horses that go two miles and horses that go two and a half. “That’s one of the reasons I ran this horse, because I realised we might not have the speed of a lot of horses in this race, but what Lester said is so true, there’s a huge difference.” Rite Of Passage has now won all three of his starts on the Flat and was, with hindsight, the good thing of the decade when 7-1 for a handicap at Leopardstown in November. He may have had another two stones to carry that day if the handicapper had known he was a Gold Cup winner waiting to happen. Having finished third in the Neptune Novice Hurdle at Cheltenham in March, he is also likely to go back over jumps in time, but Weld has grand plans on the Flat before that. “In time, he’ll obviously go back over hurdles,” he said, “but today was my first Flat target for him and the Melbourne Cup is my second Flat target for him, so we’ll see. I also have Profound Beauty as a possible runner in that race, but it looks like an obvious target for him.” Rite Of Passage is a top price of 20-1 for the Champion Hurdle next March.The ground at Ascot this week has been unusually fast and Rite Of Passage’s winning time was the latest to go into the books as a new track record, albeit only since the course was relaid before the 2006 meeting. “It was a really, really top-class race,” Murtagh said afterwards. “They went a hell of a gallop and my lad stayed well. He loved the ground and I thought I had it won turning for home, but just got caught in the last 60 yards, He’s a very brave horse and I’m sick.” Age Of Aquarius was the first horse from Aidan O’Brien’s yard to acquit itself with real credit this week and the stable did not even field a runner at the meeting on Wednesday. They have some leading chances tomorrow, but are playing catch-up with the Godolphin operation, who saddled their second winner of the meeting when Hibaayeb strode away with the Ribblesdale Stakes. Hibaayeb took the Fillies’ Mile here last autumn, but finished second-last in the 1,000 Guineas last month before running third in a Group One in France. This win appeared to take her form to a new level, for all that the opposition was relatively weak for a Group Two. She may now travel to The Curragh for the Irish Oaks next month. Frankie Dettori, her jockey, is now level with Richard Hughes and Ryan Moore on two winners at the meeting, with 12 races still to be run. Horse racing Royal Ascot Greg Wood guardian.co.uk

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Dermot Weld finally wins Ascot’s Gold Cup with Rite Of Passage

Javier Mascherano’s agent claims he is in talks with Internazionale

• Argentina captain keen to link up with Rafael Benítez again • Mascherano has spent three years at Anfield Javier Mascherano’s agent has stated he is in talks with Internazionale over a possible move which would see the Liverpool midfielder reunited with his former manager, Rafael Benítez. Mascherano, who was heavily linked with a move to Barcelona last summer, has spent the past three years at Anfield but contract negotiations have been put on hold and one of his agents, Marco Piccioli, claims the 25-year-old may very well follow in the former manager’s footsteps. “There has already been a first contact with director Marco Branca,” Piccioli told www.Itasportpress.it. “We are evaluating the move hard and in the next few days we will have a new meeting to better establish the details of this transfer deal.” Mascherano, who has two years left on his deal at Liverpool, revealed this week he is learning Italian. And the Argentina captain at World Cup 2010 admitted this month he would relish the opportunity to link up with the Spaniard again. “Would I follow Benítez? I don’t know,” he said with a shrug. “At the moment I really know little about my future. But of course with Benítez at Liverpool I experienced three incredible years. His football is my football.” Liverpool Internazionale Transfer window World Cup 2010 guardian.co.uk

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Javier Mascherano’s agent claims he is in talks with Internazionale

England v Algeria: glamour fixture requires an A-list crowd

Princes William and Harry are bringing the glitz Cape Town – but can Fabio Capello’s team reign supreme? Refuse gas and air, and proceed straight to the epidural – England’s next World Cup game is upon us. Finally, Fabio Capello’s two-and-a-half lions have the chance to exorcise last Saturday’s painful draw against the USA, by grinding out a nerve-shreddingly unconvincing 1-0 victory over Algeria. The setting for Friday’s crucial game is Green Point stadium, with the Cape Town match what you might call the glamour fixture in England’s first-round schedule. Which is to say, it will be attended by various people for whom one suspects other cities in South Africa are that bit too “authentic”. Spectators are to include London mayor Boris Johnson, who is on a five-day fact-finding mission for the 2012 Olympics, and the allegedly “football-mad” Princes William and Harry, who are on a joint tour of southern Africa. William is president of the Football Association – a role somehow even more pretend than Uncle Andrew’s job as UK trade ambassador – and he and his brother will stay on in Cape Town after the game to play a leading role in Saturday’s big event, which is a glitzy reception for England’s 2018 World Cup bid. Preparations for the soiree look solid at present – though obviously all could be derailed should Harry opt to go in fancy dress as PW Botha. Ultimately, though, Friday’s game offers England a chance to silence their footballing critics – an amusing number of whom seem to be German. First up was erstwhile Germany captain Michael Ballack, who reflected upon the difference between the two international sides. “We’re inspired by our history,” he explained, “whereas I sense England are intimidated by their past.” Next in line was the legendary Franz Beckenbauer. “What I saw of the English against the USA had very little to do with football,” schadenfreuded Der Kaiser, rightly judging that he had been watching not a football game, but some kind of psychological episode. Even German-born football fan Dr Henry Kissinger called the New York Times to offer his views on the World Cup – though sweetly he declined to add to England’s misery. “Brazil has played the most beautiful football,” the former US secretary of state apparently ruled, “while Italy has specialised in breaking the hearts of its opponents, and for Germany everyone attacks in a way suggestive of Erich von Falkenhayn’s huge flanking movements in world war one – and everyone defends.” Penetrating analysis there from the former comedy Nobel peace prizewinner. Perhaps ITV might consider Kissinger as a replacement pundit for the sacked Robbie Earle? The good doctor is already scheduled to attend the later rounds of the World Cup, South Africa being one of the countries to which he can travel without risking a connecting flight to the Hague. As for our own efforts to “move on” from Saturday, they have been mixed. If anything could make you yearn to be watching even the most lacklustre of England displays again, it is the manner in which Her Majesty’s press fills the gap between games. Lowlights since Saturday include Archbishop Desmond Tutu being presented with a Sun-branded vuvuzela, and the media pack besieging the home of hapless goalkeeper Robert Green’s parents, presumably waiting for them to emerge and disown him. The Greens have since appealed to the PCC for protection. What was needed, clearly, was something to Put Everything Into Perspective – and on Wednesday, Michael Dawson and Matthew Upson provided it. Escaping from what has been described predictably as England’s “gilded cage” of a team base, the two Tottenham defenders took a busload of hacks with them to visit an orphanage jointly funded by the FA and Spurs. According to Upson, “this puts everything into perspective” (that is, the orphanage does, not travelling everywhere with dozens of Boswells). So let us gird ourselves with that recalibrated perspective. After all, in a World Cup not short of early underperformers, England’s first result now demands to be reconsidered. According to the demented mathematics of the footballing optimist, favourites Spain losing to Switzerland pretty much bumps up our shabby draw with the USA into a triumph. Or something. The point is, it should be perfectly possible to await England v Algeria nursing the same level of mad hope with which you began this tournament, safe in the knowledge your despair will have its day. World Cup 2010 Prince Harry Prince William World Cup 2010 Group C England Marina Hyde guardian.co.uk

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England v Algeria: glamour fixture requires an A-list crowd

Sailor artist Reid Stowe completes record 1,152-day voyage

Maverick adventurer returns to New York and son he’s never seen To call Reid Stowe’s voyage “epic” barely seems to cover it. But as his 1,152 days spent continuously at sea came to an end today in New York, there seemed to be no other way of describing it. Stowe, 58, sailed his 70ft schooner, Anne, on the last short hop – from New Jersey to Manhattan – completing a trip that has taken him round the world, lasted more than three years, set a record for the longest continuous sea voyage, and presented him with the biggest surprise of all: the young son he had never seen. For although Stowe has been isolated for a very long time, he was not alone for the entire voyage. When he set sail in 2007, he was accompanied by his girlfriend Soanya Ahmad, a college graduate more than 30 years his junior, who had never been to sea and who had to be evacuated off the vessel after 300 days suffering from what she and Stowe assumed was an especially stubborn case of seasickness. Except that it wasn’t. It was morning sickness. Today, at the end of his voyage, Stowe was looking forward to finally meeting his 23-month-old son, Darshen. Since she left the boat the couple’s only communication has been by phone and email. They now plan to live together as a family and Stowe has even built a berth for Darshen on Anne. During their time apart, Ahmad had no fears over whether Stowe would stay faithful. “Reid’s not in a place where he can get distracted by anyone. So that eliminates any tensions arising from his end,” she wrote in a blog post explaining their relationship. For his entire voyage, Stowe has lived off his supplies, never putting into port or setting foot on land. He had dried fruit and vegetables, fresh fish and rainwater. Today, a mini-flotilla packed with family, friends and media followed him home in bright sunshine as he sailed up the Hudson River and docked in Manhattan. “It is an epic of exploration, like Shackleton or Scott. But with a much happier ending,” said his friend, Jeff Blumenfeld, who visited the schooner during her last full day at sea. Blumenfeld said Stowe had been in a great mood. He had served visitors, including US Customs, a meal of tea, crackers and cheese. “He was the perfect host, though the crackers were three years old. They still tasted delicious,” Blumenfeld said. Stowe has now been at sea for so long that many – including Stowe himself – have likened his experience of solitude to that which will be endured by astronauts on any future manned mission to Mars. “It is an experiment in self-exile,” said Blumenfeld, who showed Stowe an iPhone and asked: “Do you know what this is?” (Stowe did not. Nor, apparently, did he care). Stowe has triggered controversy in the sailing world. An artist and yoga enthusiast as well as a sailor, he is not the usual image of the reserved, stoical, long-distance sailor. He is a great espouser of New Age philosophy and has the air of a mystic. He built Anne himself and has lived on her since 1978, becoming well known as a sculptor and painter. Stowe’s journeys by sea have never been straightforward. He once sailed in the Atlantic for 197 days, tracing a course in the shape of a turtle. His current journey included the rough outline of a whale off South America. Such antics have drawn criticism. Several anti-Stowe websites have dismissed him as careless or an exhibitionist or a poor sailor. One blog, called 1,000 Days of Hell, depicted him as Don Quixote with his boat tilting for a windmill. “Reid is a hazard to navigation,” wrote one commentator on the Sailing Anarchy website. “He dead yet?” asked another. The abuse has shocked Charles Doane, a sailing writer who has followed Stowe’s journey and was among those waiting to greet him in New York. “I can think of no other long-distance ocean sailor who has ever endured such relentless and venomous public abuse while actively engaged in a voyage,” he wrote. It has not been an easy trip. Aside from the drama of Ahmad’s pregnancy, Stowe has battled the elements and catastrophe. After just 15 days at sea, Anne was hit by a freighter in the Atlantic and damaged so badly she drifted for a month. His sails were torn rounding Cape Horn and he even capsized once. His computer died several months ago, leaving him with just a satellite phone for contact. Yet Stowe persevered. Waiting for him today was a crowd of well-wishers. Whatever one thinks of Stowe’s motivation and methods, whether he is a madman or a genius or perhaps both, his achievement has gone down in history. “If you have a dream, if you want to do something unique, then he shows you can figure out a way,” said Blumenfeld. Sailing United States Paul Harris guardian.co.uk

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Sailor artist Reid Stowe completes record 1,152-day voyage

Devils Set To Name John MacLean Head Coach

After six seasons as the New Jersey Devils assistant coach and one season as a head coach in the American Hockey League, John MacLean will get his shot at head coaching in the NHL. The team announced the news on their website on Thursday morning and they’ll hold a press conference at 2 PM the same day. With the hiring, our Devils blog, In Lou We Trust , doesn’t see much changing in terms of the system in New Jersey. If

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Devils Set To Name John MacLean Head Coach

World Cup 2010, Nigeria Vs. Greece: Vasilis Torosidis Puts Home Rebound To Give Greece 2-1, Second Half Lead

Vincent Enyeama has kept Nigeria in this tournament, between his performance on Saturday denying Lionel Messi and his saves on Thursday to keep 10-man Nigeria even with Greece.

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World Cup 2010, Nigeria Vs. Greece: Vasilis Torosidis Puts Home Rebound To Give Greece 2-1, Second Half Lead